The politicization of Jobs's widow

SAN FRANCISCO — Immigration reform has a fierce new ally: the wealthiest woman in Silicon Valley.

Laurene Powell Jobs, the widow of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, has made helping undocumented children get on a path to citizenship her cause, swinging through Washington to meet with lawmakers, including Sens. Marco Rubio and Dick Durbin, and Rep. Kevin McCarthy, key players in a brewing battle over immigration reform.

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The longtime supporter of liberal causes also has been raising her profile in Democratic circles. In September, she was spotted at the Democratic convention in Charlotte, N.C., sitting next to Chelsea Clinton during former President Bill Clinton’s speech. Last year, she sat next to Michelle Obama during the State of the Union address.

Powell Jobs plans to continue her pressure campaign in 2013, urging politicians and business leaders to help undocumented kids. That’s good news for supporters of immigration reform, including the White House, since immigration is expected to be the major policy fight next year.

“She is a great advocate for the DREAM Act,” said Durbin. The Illinois Democrat sponsored the failed bill to offer a path to citizenship to the children of illegal immigrants. “She has not only brought friends and supporters to the cause, she has also done great research work on the issue.”

Friends say Powell Jobs became aware of the issues undocumented children face through her work with College Track, an after-school, college preparatory program she co-founded and for which she has tutored kids.

“She found the flaw in the system,” said Ron Conway, a friend and prominent Silicon Valley investor. “It’s the logical extension of the work she is doing. There needs to be a neutral third-party catalyst to say these kids have a right to success. And what better person than Laurene Powell Jobs.”

During a late November trip to the Hill, Powell Jobs met with Durbin and McCarthy, the House Republican whip. Her goal, they said, is to help create bipartisan support for the DREAM Act, which would give eligible young people a six-year path to citizenship.

Durbin has introduced the DREAM Act in every Congress since 2001 and plans to do so again next year.

McCarthy’s office confirmed the meeting and said it is part of Powell Jobs’s effort to create bipartisan support for the issue.

“She’s been an incredibly effective advocate and thoroughly savvy on politics and policy,” said Democratic lobbyist Joel Johnson of The Glover Park Group. The firm serves as an informal adviser to Powell Jobs. “I think it’s the beginning of the process. I know that she and [her nonprofit] are committed to being a part of that process and doing everything they can to advance the cause. She’s been engaged in this effort for many, many years, and we’re at about to enter a critical period in time.”

Powell Jobs declined to sit for an interview with POLITICO. A spokeswoman noted “how appreciative Laurene was for the time with those congressional Democrats and Republicans who recognize the important children’s issues represented by the DREAM Act.”